Citizen Lane: Unstoppable agitator pens lively memoir

Lane with the mimeographed manuscript of "Rush to Judgment" that Paul McCartney borrowed.

hawes spencer

His backyard in Charlottesville's Bellair neighborhood is far removed from the jungle of Guyana, and the grandfatherly man relaxing in a patio chair doesn't seem the type to tangle with murderous henchmen of the late Jim Jones. But here he is, a man who grabbed a knife-wielding arm and escaped from Jonestown on the day that over 900 Americans died.

This is also the lawyer who freed a Florida father likely framed for murdering his children, the defense counselor who convinced a jury of an unjust government prosecution at Wounded Knee, and the first person who systematically tried to prove that the killers of JFK and MLK weren't lone gunmen.

Along the way, Lane helped promote the fledgling career of folk music legend Pete Seeger and organized a 1957 speech by Martin Luther King Jr. (on the back of a truck, no less). There was a time when practically everyone in the world– even Paul McCartney– knew Mark Lane. Now, they just know his impact.

Upcoming:

Lane will be speaking at New Dominion Bookshop on Friday, October 26 at 5:30pm. The talk is free and open to the public.

Related:

"Well, he could'na done it, could he?" the then 22-year-old Beatle telephoned Lane one night in 1965 after the musician, having met Lane at a small party in London, borrowed his only manuscript of Rush to Judgment.

The first of Lane's books to challenge the Warren Commission, Rush to Judgment may no longer be gospel, as subsequent forensic evidence has convinced many mainstream historians of the veracity of the angry-young-Oswald and the single-bullet theory. Lane maintains that popular sentiment shows he's right.

It's hard to argue with the man who had a hunch that an African-American man named James Richardson had been railroaded into a death sentence by officials in Arcadia, Florida. After 21 years behind bars, Richardson was walked out of jail by Lane– "the happiest day of my professional life," Lane says of that April day in 1989.

The New York native arrived in Charlottesville seven years ago to help his sister, Ann Lane, who long ran the UVA Women's Studies department. She moved to New York, but he– thrilled by the climate, intellectual and otherwise– remained.

"Nothing is more dangerous than an idea whose time is yet to come," he writes in Citizen Lane, his new autobiography which recounts six decades of pushing for justice in the courtroom and on the streets. For instance, he enlisted famous friends like Coretta Scott King and Dick Gregory to prod officials for Richardson's freedom.

"I find the court system works better when you put a lot of pressure on it," says Lane, "because the status quo is very strong."

Sitting in his backyard, he tells a reporter that the First Amendment is the most important part of the Constitution. He and Jane Fonda relied upon that one to help veterans document the ways in which the American policy of comparing body-counts in the war in Vietnam could lead to atrocities.

As for action, Lane was one of the few who really was a Freedom Rider, the agitators with the then-audacious idea that people of different races should be able to ride a bus and enjoy a cup of coffee together. (Julian Bond later found the mugshot of Lane from his 1961 arrest in Jackson, Mississippi, and sent it to him.)

At the age of 85, Lane says he now plans to transition to writing novels. But one has to wonder: How could fiction be any zestier than Lane's life?

5 comments

justsaying October 15th, 2012 | 11:30am

Hawes... exactly what new "forensic evidence" are you referring to when you say that "mainstream" historians now believe the single bullet theory? I've studied the JFK assassination for over 40 years and I must have missed that. Mainstream historians have always towed the Warren Commission line... that's how they got to be mainstream...and get book contracts.

George Jefferson October 16th, 2012 | 3:57pm

> " subsequent forensic evidence has convinced many mainstream historians of the veracity of the angry-young-Oswald and the single-bullet theory."

Hawes, what evidence do you have to back up this statement?

john gault October 16th, 2012 | 8:12pm

Perhaps The Hook is revealing itself as mainstream for making a statement about the "veracity" of the crazy kid Oswald did it alone with an antique rifle theory.

Though the second sentence almost seems to infer that most people believe that it was a conspiracy:

"The first of Lane's books to challenge the Warren Commission, Rush to Judgment may no longer be gospel, as subsequent forensic evidence has convinced many mainstream historians of the veracity of the angry-young-Oswald and the single-bullet theory. Lane maintains that popular sentiment shows he's right."

Please read James W. Douglass's book JFK and the Unspeakable: Why He Died and Why It Matters to see the veracity of the belief in the conspiracy to kill the 35th President of the United States. The bullet trumped the ballot!

And like a good mainstream publication there is no mention of Mark Lane's latest book published in November of 2011 and titled:
Last Word: My Indictment of the CIA in the Murder of JFK

Need I say more?

2nightdebate October 16th, 2012 | 10:11pm

where is the Hook article regarding tonight's presidential debate? Are you really republican losers? I think so...Where are all the armcharm pundits regarding the thrashing the president gave the contender? Huh?